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The Cold King(4)

By:Amber Jaeger


Presentable or not, she had been chosen and he was stuck with her.

With grim determination she approached her new home and walked through  the tall, iron gates signaling entrance into the king's estate. Her  steps echoed off the cobbled courtyard and before she was ready, a set  of mammoth wooden doors stopped her monotonous steps. The air was cold  and she shivered as the freezing wind whipped her hair and clothes while  she paused to gather her courage. Her future was set whether she  knocked on the door or not. But her heart still thrummed in her chest  and she leaned her forehead against the smooth wood doors to catch her  breath.



"He just wants a new servant, surely he cannot mean to harm me," she prayed against the door.

Unexpectedly it gave way and she fell to her knees in a bright,  cavernous hall. Shaken, Calia gave a bitter laugh and climbed to her  feet to brush off her dress.

The emptiness was shattered by a quiet voice.

"Are you the one the village has chosen?" Calia jerked up and found  herself only inches from another servant, a butler by the looks of him.

His black suit was pressed and clean and he held himself at perfect  attention. A vaguely disdainful look was ghosting his face. The lines  around his eyes did not seem to agree with his dark, perfectly combed  hair and Calia struggled to guess his age. Older than her father would  have been if he had lived, she decided. Not that she really cared how  old the butler was, she just wanted to how long he had been at the  castle.

The man raised a fisted hand to his mouth and gave a discreet cough. He was still waiting for an answer.

Calia could only nod.

"Then follow me." He turned on his heel and strode down a long hallway.  The man was large and strong and Calia struggled to keep up. It did not  help that everything caught her eye. The corridor was tall and wide with  creamy white tiles and white walls interrupted by giant beveled glass  windows. The last of the setting sun's rays pierced the windows at an  angle that fractured them and sent tiny sparks of color over everything.  Paintings and decorations were sparse and everything gleamed in the  bright whiteness. While it was very beautiful it also seemed very cold.                       
       
           



       



The butler stopped abruptly and Calia collided with his wide back. She  heard him give a little sigh before he turned to rest his hand on an  elegantly carved door. "Our king will see you now. Please try to  remember whatever manners you possibly possess. And you will curtsey."

Calia nodded again. Her dry mouth would not let her get a word out. With  another exasperated sigh he opened the door and ushered her through.

Calia stumbled over the threshold and jumped when the door shut behind  her. She looked around and her eyes found the raised throne at the end  of the long room but it was empty. Cautiously she set a foot on the  cream carpet running along the perfectly polished floor. The theme from  corridor had continued into the room and the weak sunlight glaring in  through the windows was magnified by the white walls and it burned her  eyes.

She squinted to see better and inched along the runner until she stepped  into the shadowy alcove encasing the throne. Calia rubbed her sore eyes  and gasped when she opened them. The previously empty throne now had  someone in it.

She stood rigid with shock before remembering the butler's command. With  a little hesitation she dropped into a curtsey so low she stumbled and  almost fell. Cursing silently, she righted herself and kept her watering  eyes on the floor.



"You may rise," a cold, bored voice rang out. She flinched but there was  no option of resisting. She forced herself up and slowly took in the  Cold King.

Shining black boots rested only feet from her brown faded ones and her  eyes rose without the permission of her mind. The king's breeches were  perfectly pressed and a snow white shirt peeked out from his dark,  embellished jacket.

Calia forced herself to continue to look up and take in his face.

His chin was strong and smooth, centered perfectly under his strong jaw.  His ruby mouth gave no hint of a smile or frown and her stomach  lurched.

She had hoped to read his eyes, prayed to find some kindness in them but  they were hooded by the mask covering the top half of his face. It  seemed to be the same one he had worn the day before and up close she  could see the surface was encrusted in diamond chips. It should have  been beautiful but the cold, glinting perfection of the mask only  terrified Calia. It covered not only his face but his emotions as well  and she could not read him. Even his dark waves of hair framing the mask  did nothing to soften his look.

It was several, horrible moments before the Cold King spoke again.

"What is your name?" he asked, drawing the words out. If he was staring  at her she couldn't tell but the skin between her shoulders was  prickling painfully.

"Calia Thorne," she whispered, then hastily added, "Your Majesty."



The king cocked his head to the side and his terrifying mask gleamed  with tiny rainbows. "Little Thorne?" he mused, correctly guessing the  meaning of her name.

"Yes, Your Majesty. My mother said I was always kicking and poking into  her ribs when she carried me inside her." Nervousness loosened her jaw  before she could snap it shut again.

He leaned forward a fraction of an inch. "Your mother referred to you as a thorn in her side before you were even born?"

Calia nodded as old hurt washed over her.

"I see. So you chose to come here," he assumed.

Her voice failed her and she shook her head.

"No? Your mother must have some very redeeming qualities." A ghost of a  smile lifted the corner of his mouth. "Or you just really did not want  to come here." When Calia did not respond he continued. "Tell me, why  did they choose you?"

Calia faltered, not sure how to answer him. "I suppose because I am excellent at cleaning and housekeeping and-"

"Perhaps you are. But why did they really send you?"

Fear and a hint of anger stirred in her breast. Not only had he made her a slave, he wanted to humiliate her.

She squared her shoulders and gave him the truth. "Because I am ugly and  no one will ever want to marry me. No matter how useful I am my mother  doesn't want me around forever and no one else would want to take me."  Tears pricked her eyes and she furiously blinked them away.



Calia absolutely hated that she cried when sad, hurt, angry or happy and  resolved once again to banish the embarrassing behavior. Again, she  failed.

The king sat for a moment, tapping the edge of his hateful mask. "I see.  Well, I should hope to find you as useful as you claim. You are to be  my personal servant and will attend to my every need."

Calia gasped and jerked back, her body filling with fear and shame.

But the Cold King just frowned at her. "Do not be ridiculous. You are a child. An ugly child."

His unkind words soothed a little of her fear and she took a steadying breath.                       
       
           



       

The king continued. "You will attend me from sun up to sun down. You  will bring me my meals, clean my rooms, care for my wardrobe and fetch  anything I require. You will also attend me during any meetings I may  have." Calia's skin tingled painfully and she could tell he was looking  her up and down. "I see we have some work to do in order to make you  presentable. But first …  Come with me."

Calia jerked back as he rose from his throne and swept past her. He was  taller than she had thought, as well as quick and graceful. He radiated a  strength and confidence she could never hope to possess.

The king was at the door before she could force her legs to move and she  struggled to keep up. He left out the door the opposite way she had  come in and led her further into castle. He didn't pause before starting  down a winding, stone stairway. The air chilled considerably as they  descended and she wrapped her cloak a little tighter around herself. The  king said nothing, just skipped lightly down the stairs until they  opened into a gloomy, low ceiled room.



Calia pulled to a stop on the bottom step. "But I thought … " Her voice  and resolve crumbled as she looked around. Five wooden doors held shut  by wide metal bars lined the room. Each had a small slot in the center  and bucket next to it.

"First," the Cold King said, "you must learn that I am now your master."

"But I know that," Calia protested.

The king turned around and she was struck again by his cold perfection.  "I am your master and you are my servant. From now on, anything you have  or possess is only because I choose to give it to you." He reached for  her and she stumbled back and fell onto the stairs.